Literature DB >> 37510

Exocytotic shedding and glial uptake of photoreceptor membrane by a salticid spider.

A D Blest, J Maples.   

Abstract

Receptors in the anterior lateral eyes of salticid spiders possess paired rhabdomeres. The tips of the rhabdomeral microvilli lie adjacent to non-pigmented glial processes. Photoreceptor membrane is lost during turnover by a hitherto undescribed process: individual microvilli lengthen at their tips, taper, and are received by corresponding, coated endocytotic pits in the glial membrane. Pits detach as coated vesicles with coherent fragments of microvilli within them, lose their coats, and accumulate in the glial processes as disorderly membranous detritus. Some microvillus membrane disintegrates before local endocytosis, and appears to get into the glial arms distant from the parent rhabdomere by invaginations which are either endocytotic clefts or a tubulo-cisternal system, but whose precise nature is not yet clear. No photoreceptor membrane is lost by pinocytosis into the receptor cytoplasm. Analogies between the behaviour of this system and the phagocytosis of shed vertebrate photoreceptor membrane are briefly discussed.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 37510     DOI: 10.1098/rspb.1979.0016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci        ISSN: 0950-1193


  9 in total

1.  Photoreceptor membrane breakdown in the spider Dinopis: the fate of rhabdomere products.

Authors:  A D Blest; L Kao; K Powell
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1978-12-29       Impact factor: 5.249

2.  Phagocytosis of rhabdomeral membrane by crab photoreceptors (Leptograpsus variegatus).

Authors:  S Stowe
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 5.249

3.  Trophospongium-like structures in an insect eye: response of retinula cells of Papilio xuthus (Lepidoptera) to irradiation with ultraviolet light.

Authors:  E Eguchi; V B Meyer-Rochow
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 5.249

4.  Extracellular shedding of photoreceptor membrane in the open rhabdom of a tipulid fly.

Authors:  D S Williams; A D Blest
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1980       Impact factor: 5.249

5.  A new mechanism for transitory, local endocytosis in photoreceptors of a spider, Dinopis.

Authors:  A D Blest; D G Price
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 5.249

6.  Ommatidial structure in relation to turnover of photoreceptor membrane in the locust.

Authors:  D S Williams
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 5.249

7.  A labile, Ca2+-dependent cytoskeleton in rhabdomeral microvilli of blowflies.

Authors:  A D Blest; S Stowe; W Eddey
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 5.249

8.  Rhabdom size and photoreceptor membrane turnover in a muscoid fly.

Authors:  D S Williams
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 5.249

Review 9.  The cell biology of the retinal pigment epithelium.

Authors:  Aparna Lakkaraju; Ankita Umapathy; Li Xuan Tan; Lauren Daniele; Nancy J Philp; Kathleen Boesze-Battaglia; David S Williams
Journal:  Prog Retin Eye Res       Date:  2020-02-24       Impact factor: 19.704

  9 in total

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